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How to End Our Financial Misery

By Robert Pollin, The Nation. Posted November 13, 2008.


A large-scale stimulus program is the only action that can possibly do the job.
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The collapse on Wall Street is now decimating Main Street, Ocean Parkway, Mountain View Drive and I-80. Since January the economy has shed 760,000 jobs. In September alone, monthly mass layoff claims for unemployment insurance jumped by 34 percent. General Electric, General Motors, Chrysler, Yahoo! and Xerox have all announced major layoffs, along with the humbled financial titans Goldman Sachs and Bank of America. Fully one-quarter of all businesses in the United States are planning to cut payroll over the next year. State governments are facing a tax revenue shortfall of roughly $100 billion in the next fiscal year, 15 percent of their overall budgets. Because states have rules requiring balanced budgets, they are staring at major budget cuts and layoffs. The fact that the economy's overall gross domestic product (GDP) shrank between July and September -- the first such decline since the September 2001 terrorist attacks -- only confirms the realities on the ground facing workers, households, businesses and the public sector.

The recession is certainly here, so the question now is how to diminish its length and severity. A large-scale federal government stimulus program is the only action that can possibly do the job.




So far, our leaders in Washington have dithered. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve chair Ben Bernanke continue improvising with financial rescue plans, committing eye-popping sums of money in the process. Paulson's original program for the Treasury to commit $700 billion in taxpayers' money to purchase "toxic" loans -- the mortgage-backed securities held by the private banks that are in default or arrears -- was at least partially shelved in favor of direct government purchases of major ownership stakes in the banks. But neither of Paulson's strategies has thus far helped to stabilize the situation, with global stock and currency markets gyrating wildly and investors dumping risky business loans in favor of safe Treasury bonds. The crisis has even hit the previously staid world of money market mutual funds, where the fainthearted once could park their savings safely in exchange for low returns. Money market fund holders have been panic-selling since mid-September, dumping $500 billion worth of these accounts.




To stanch a money market fund collapse, Bernanke announced on October 21 that, on top of the Paulson bailout plan, the Fed stands ready to purchase $540 billion in certificates of deposit and private business loans from the money market funds. This action is in addition to two previous initiatives committing the Fed to buy up, as needed, business loans from failing banks. Until this crisis, the Fed had conducted monetary policy almost exclusively through the purchase and sale of Treasury bonds, rarely buying directly the debts of private businesses or banks. But the pre-crisis rules of monetary policy are out the window.





Even if some combination of Treasury and Federal Reserve actions begins to stabilize financial markets in the coming weeks, this will not, by itself, reverse the deepening crisis in the nonfinancial economy. A rise in unemployment in the range of 8 to 9 percent -- upward of 14 million people without work -- is becoming an increasingly likely scenario over the next year.





President-elect Obama as well as most members of the newly elected Democratic-controlled Congress seem to recognize the urgency of such a large-scale stimulus program above and beyond any financial bailout program. Even Bernanke, whose term of office continues through January 2010, has offered his endorsement. But despite the near consensus, questions remain, including: How should the stimulus funds be spent? How large does the stimulus need to be? Where do we find the money to pay for it?




A Green Public-Investment Stimulus




Recessions create widespread human suffering. Minimizing the suffering has to be the top priority in fighting the recession. This means expanding unemployment benefits and food stamps to counteract the income losses of unemployed workers and the poor. By stabilizing the pocketbooks of distressed households, these measures also help people pay their mortgages and pump money into consumer markets.




Beyond this, the stimulus program should be designed to meet three additional criteria. First, we have to generate the largest possible employment boost for a given level of new government spending. Second, the spending targets should be in areas that strengthen the economy in the long run, not just through a short-term money injection. And finally, despite the recession, we do not have the luxury of delaying the fight against global warming.





To further all these goals we need a green public-investment stimulus. It would defend state-level health and education projects against budget cuts; finance long-delayed upgrades for our roads, bridges, railroads and water management systems; and underwrite investments in energy efficiency -- including building retrofits and public transportation -- as well as new wind, solar, geothermal and biomass technologies.




This kind of stimulus would generate many more jobs -- eighteen per $1 million in spending -- than would programs to increase spending on the military and the oil industry (i.e., new military surges in Iraq or Afghanistan combined with "Drill, baby, drill"), which would generate only about 7.5 jobs for every $1 million spent. There are two reasons for the green program's advantage. The first factor is higher "labor intensity" of spending -- that is, more money is being spent on hiring people and less on machines, supplies and consuming energy. This becomes obvious if we imagine hiring teachers, nurses and bus drivers versus drilling for oil off the coasts of Florida, California and Alaska. The second factor is the "domestic content" of spending -- how much money is staying within the US economy, as opposed to buying imports or spending abroad. When we build a bridge in Minneapolis, upgrade the levee system in New Orleans or retrofit public buildings and private homes to raise their energy efficiency, virtually every dollar is spent within our economy. By contrast, only 80 cents of every dollar spent in the oil industry remains in the United States. The figure is still lower with the military budget.





What about another round of across-the-board tax rebates, such as the program the Bush administration and the Democratic Congress implemented in April? A case could be made for this in light of the financial stresses middle-class families are facing. However, even if we assume that the middle-class households will spend all the money refunded to them, the net increase in employment will be about fourteen jobs per $1 million spent -- about 20 percent less than the green public-investment program (the main reason for this weaker impact is the lower domestic content of average household consumption). Also, it isn't likely that the households would spend all their rebate money. Just as with April's rebate program, households would channel a large share of the money into paying off debts.




The Matter of Size





This is no time to be timid. The stimulus program last April totaled $150 billion, including $100 billion in household rebates and the rest in business tax breaks. This initiative did encourage some job growth, though as we have seen, the impact would have been larger had the same money been channeled toward a green public-investment stimulus. But any job benefits were negated by the countervailing forces of the collapsed housing bubble, the financial crisis and the spike in oil prices. The resulting recession is now before us. This argues for a significantly larger stimulus than the one enacted in April. But how much larger?




One way to approach the question is to consider the last time the economy faced a recession of similar severity, which was in 1980-82, during Ronald Reagan's first term as president. In 1982 gross domestic product contracted by 1.9 percent, the most severe one-year drop in GDP since World War II. Unemployment rose to 9.7 percent that year, which was, again, the highest figure since the '30s.




The Reagan administration responded with a massive stimulus program, even though its alleged free-market devotees never acknowledged as much. They preferred calling their program of military expansion and tax cuts for the rich "supply-side economics." Whatever the label, this combination generated an increase in the federal deficit of about two percentage points relative to the size of the economy at that time. In 1983 GDP rose sharply by 4.5 percent. In 1984 GDP growth accelerated to 7.2 percent, with Reagan declaring the return to "morning in America." Unemployment fell back to 7.5 percent.





In today's economy, an economic stimulus equivalent to the 1983 Reagan program would amount to about $300 billion in spending -- roughly double the size of April's stimulus program, though in line with the high-end figures being proposed in Congress. A stimulus of this size could create nearly 6 million jobs, offsetting the job-shedding forces of the recession.





Of course, the green public-investment stimulus will be much more effective as a jobs program than the Reagan agenda of militarism and upper-income tax cuts. This suggests that an initiative costing somewhat less than $300 billion could be adequate to fight the job losses. But because the green public-investment stimulus is also designed to produce long-term benefits to the economy, there is little danger that we would spend too much. Since all these investments are needed to fight global warming and improve overall productivity, the sooner we move forward, the better. Moreover, under today's weak job market conditions, we will not run short of qualified workers.




How to Pay for All This?





Let's add up the figures I have tossed around. These include the $700 billion bank rescue operation being engineered by the Treasury, the $540 billion with which Fed chair Bernanke has pledged to bail out the money market mutual funds, along with unspecified additional billions to buy unwanted business debts held by banks. On top of these, I am proposing $300 billion for a second fiscal stimulus beyond last April's $150 billion program. At a certain point, it is fair to wonder whether we are still dealing with real dollars as opposed to Monopoly money.




In fact, the whole program remains within the realm of affordability, albeit approaching its upper bounds. But major adjustments from the current management approach are needed. In particular, the Federal Reserve has to continue exerting control over the Treasury on all bailout operations. That is, we need more initiatives like Bernanke's $540 billion program to stabilize the money market mutual funds and less Treasury fumbling with taxpayers' money to buy either the private banks' bad assets or ownership shares in the banks.




We need to recognize openly what has largely been an unspoken fact about these bailout operations: that the Federal Reserve has the power to create dollars at will, while the Treasury finances its operations either through tax revenues or borrowed funds (which means using taxpayer money at some later time to pay back its debts with interest). The Fed does not literally run printing presses when it decides to inject more money into the economy; but its normal activity of writing checks to private banks to buy the banks' Treasury bonds amounts to the same thing. When the banks receive their checks from the Fed, they have more cash on hand than they did before they sold their Treasury bonds to the Fed. Especially during crises, there is no reason for the Fed to restrain itself from making good use (though of course not overuse) of this dollar-creating power.





The Fed is also supposed to be the chief regulator of the financial system. Now is the time to make up for Alan Greenspan's confessed failures over twenty years in this role. In exchange for the Fed protecting the private financial institutions from collapse, Bernanke must insist that the banks begin lending money again to support productive investments, while prohibiting them from yet another return to high-rolling speculation. Special measures are also needed to keep people in their homes.




The Deficit Looms





When the economy began slowing this year, the fiscal deficit more than doubled, from $162 billion to $389 billion. We cannot know for certain how much the deficit will expand. It could rise to $800 billion, $1 trillion or even somewhat higher, depending on how the bailout operations are managed. Of course, it would be utterly self-defeating for the United States to run a reckless fiscal policy, no matter how pressing the need to fight the financial crisis and recession. But in the current crisis conditions, even a $1 trillion deficit need not be reckless.





Let's return to the Reagan experience for perspective. In 1983 the Reagan deficits peaked at 6 percent of the economy's GDP. With GDP now around $14.4 trillion, a $1 trillion deficit would represent about 7 percent of GDP, one percentage point higher than the 1983 figure.




Of course, the global financial system has undergone dramatic changes since the 1980s, so direct comparisons with the Reagan deficits are not entirely valid. One change is that government debt is increasingly owned by foreign governments and private investors. This means that interest payments on that debt flow increasingly from the coffers of the Treasury to foreign owners of Treasury bonds.





At the same time, as one feature of the crisis, Treasury bonds are, and will remain for some time, the safest and most desirable financial instrument in the global financial system. US and foreign investors are clamoring to purchase Treasuries as opposed to buying stocks, bonds issued by private companies or derivatives. This is pushing down the interest rates on Treasuries. For example, on October 15, 2007, a three-year Treasury bond paid out 4.25 percent in interest, whereas this past October 15, the interest payment had fallen to 1.9 percent. By contrast, a BAA corporate bond paid 6.6 percent in interest one year ago but has risen this year to 9 percent. As long as the private financial markets remain gripped by instability and fear, the Treasury will be able to borrow at negligible interest rates. Because of this, allowing the deficit to rise even as high as 7 percent of GDP does not represent a burden on the Treasury greater than what accompanied the Reagan deficits.





There is, then, no reason to tread lightly in fighting the recession, with all its attendant dangers and misery. Indeed, severe misery and danger will certainly rise as long as timidity -- the path of least resistance -- establishes the boundaries of acceptable action. The incoming Obama administration can take decisive steps now to defend people's livelihoods and to reconstruct a viable financial system, productive infrastructure and job market on the foundation of a clean-energy economy.



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See more stories tagged with: economy, recession, economic crisis, stimulus, bailout

Robert Pollin is a professor of economics and co-director of the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) at the University of Massachusetts.

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Debt Forgiveness, "Medicare for All" and Money and Credit as a Public Utility.
Posted by: mmckinl on Nov 13, 2008 12:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
More investment for infrastructure is indeed needed but this will take too long to work itself into the economy.

With Bankruptcy Reform, in particular, legalizing house price reductions in bankruptcy court could solve many foreclosures almost immediately. They are also necessary because so many mortgages have several owners with different " pieces" of the mortgage. Chris Dodd already proposed this but was rebuffed by the banking interests. Bankruptcy reform could also be extended to the "cramdown" of valuations on cars and appliances. The 2005 Bankruptcy Act was a travesty of justice.

To get real money immediately into the economy we need Medicare for All. Medicare for All would help re-capitalize business (especially manufacturing), school districts, state and local government, individual payers and the under and uninsured. The states could use any excess of savings for unemployment and pension funds. Overall this could save hundreds of thousands if not millions of jobs while putting money quickly and directly into the system in the most efficient, fairest way ... taking care of people's medical bills.

Debt must be written off. Currently the US is in total over $52 Trillion in debt. This does not include the mounting promises of Social Security and Medicare-Medicaid.

$52 trillion in debts with $14 trillion in GDP means that at an average of 5% interest principle and interest on this total indebtedness would be well over 20% of GDP. Since our savings rate is zero and our growth rate is 3% we have to commit 20% of all output to pay the bills. Clue: There isn't 20 % of GDP left over after spending what we need to live ... food, fuel and shelter let alone 7% for the military, 17% for medical care and 25% to have Wall Street count our money. This massive overall debt will have to be reduced by over half just to get started again. This will happen either through rampant inflation, a severe recession or depression or a combination of both.

To that end we need a public central bank, not the privately owned and operated Federal Reserve and the use of the Constitutional right to print money without debt. Money creation and credit need to become a public utility. This of course would break the banks monopoly on money creation, but ask yourself : Who got us into this mess if it wasn't the Wall Street Banks?

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Repeal the Federal Reserve Act
Posted by: Unapologetic Liberal on Nov 13, 2008 1:23 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The first step and the most effective measure to regain some modicum of control over the nation's financial system would be to shut down the Federal Reserve. There is absolutely no reason for any NGO to have control of the money supply. Those radical longhairs of 1776 knew this and wrote it into the Constitution within Article One, Section 8.

The power to create money (out of thin air since we abandoned the gold standard) is the power to manipulate every aspect of the economy. That power should be reserved to those acting in the nation's best interest and with no conflict of interest. We expect congressmen to abstain from voting on bills when there is conflict of interest, we expect presidents to divest of property in which there is conflict of interest, and we expect judges to recuse themselves in cases in which they have some interest or personal ties to the parties. It should be no different in the regulation of the nation's money supply.

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» [shakes head in amazement] Posted by: GuitarBill
» RE: epeal the Federal Reserve Act Posted by: Unapologetic Liberal
While These Professors of Economy, "are Sitting in Offices", let them...
Posted by: One American Lady on Nov 13, 2008 5:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Take This Into Consideration:
"THE U.S. GOVERNMENT, HAS FIGURED OUT A WAY...
TO USE THE ...TAXPAYERS...TO... PAY MONEY... TO THE GOVERNMENT... FOR THE ... NEGLECT OF THE
CITIZENS.... IN PAYING...THE DEBTS... THEY OWE
FOR "CHILD-SUPPORT & TAXES, TO THE U.S. GOVERNMENT"...& "it's done, thru the Stimulus
Payments... "AT THE EXPENSE OF THE TAXPAYERS".
Not only is a Taxpayer, paying taxes, the money is being used to "Pay the Taxes of Others, Who Fail to Pay Their Own Debts"... isn't this a Crock of Crap to Happen to Any Taxpayer... a Member of the Working Class...
who can barely make a living, to support themselves & any members of their families, they may be responsible for supporting??
I BELIEVE OUR WAY / THE AMERICAN WAY...HAS JUST
"REVERSED ITSELF"... & that ALREADY THE AMERICAN PEOPLE, OF THE LOWER-CLASS, ARE HAVING TO "RETURN TO THE WAY OF LIFE, OF THEIR
FOREFATHERS, which means, they Must Fish / Hunt & Live off the Land, Moreso than Ever" in order to have a More Healthy Diet.
And I must say this, "wear hand-me-downs, from neighbors / friends & relatives"... just like life was Not so Many Years ago.
At least in this State of Oklahoma, where money is not the most important item on the agenda, except enough to pay the utilities, & then, the agencies who are supposed to be helping, do it VERY SPARINGLY...RATIONING THE
BENEFITS...& sometimes, like in winter-time, some citizens, are without sufficient heat, to survive, & often spend part of the time, "staying in the home with relatives or friends or neighbors"... til the cold weather,
is past us for another year.
SUCH IS LIFE WHEN YOU ARE PART OF THE LOW-INCOME CLASS ... IN AMERICA.
One American Lady

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And why do people have to be frivilous spenders anyway?
Posted by: maxpayne on Nov 13, 2008 5:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's nothing wrong with being frugal for a change so quit worrying about recession. It just means that some people are waking up to the fact that NO, despite the too cheap to be true prices on crude oil, spending like there's no tomorrow is not the fucking answer. And it's time to stop sucking up to the propaganda that spending mainly drives up the "economy" as it's nothing more than pie-in-the-sky BULLSHIT to keep you in the losers' column.

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The Problem is TOO much debt
Posted by: Ohjin on Nov 13, 2008 5:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And the author surmises that more debt is the solution.

BRILLIANT!

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» RE: The Problem is TOO much debt Posted by: left_libertarian
Stupid is as stupid does
Posted by: solrev on Nov 13, 2008 5:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I read these articles and no where in them do I see a plan to end the recession. There is a big difference between documenting what could be done and how to do that. Every thing is fine, when the labor of the industrialized countries is at a subsistence level; the global economy will have won the game. Every one competes at the same labor cost. Ending the recession requires a change. Actually it would be easy to do except that there are too many hands in the cookie jar. An example, the auto industry is also a retirement industry and a healthcare industry. Change requires that we remove the healthcare industry, national healthcare that no one in power actually desires. The job loses in the healthcare insurance industry could be absorbed into the county social security office’s to pay doctor and hospital bills for that county. Shareholders will have to take one for the Gipper. With a national cost database we would know how much taxes would be required to pay for medical treatments. With a national database we could also measure treatment effectiveness and easily detect fraud. Give the Surgeon General that database. How to pay for the green revolution, simple nationalize the natural gas industry and use cheap gas to pay for the green revolution, just as cheap oil paid for the industrial revolution. T. Bone is right except he does not need to make all that money. Since we can get off oil in a short period of time, we do not need all those military bases protecting the flow of oil from the Caspian Sea to the to the Mediterranean Sea to the Arabian Sea, from sea to shining sea. Since we are going to use gas, we do not need the ethanol boondoggle anymore. Since we are going into the print money time, now is the time to change, however we are caught in an infinite loop, how to change without changing. Welcome to the revolution of 2012.

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» RE: Stupid is as stupid does Posted by: left_libertarian
RE: Sad
Posted by: Knot_Rich on Nov 13, 2008 11:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And this surprises you?
Where have you been for the past 4 decades?
The sorry part is it's our own fault, Americans have the power to hold it's government accountable, but rather than pay attention to what their representatives are doing, at all levels from city on up, the citizens rot their brains in front of a TV screen fantasizing over ESPN or American Idol, wasting their lives over something that has absolutely no contributing value or impact on their lives. Meanwhile, their representatives, while the turkeys are distracted, do what they want and raid your pockets. Even last election there were may who didn't go out and vote, and just wait until mid-terms in 2010, watch the turnout, less than 50% for sure, maybe 40% if we're lucky, pittiful. Our politicians lie to us and we don't hold them accountable, less than half the people even know who their senators or representatives are, only a handful ever contact them, and then usually only when they need something. How'd they vote, what bills have the been supporting, people don't know, ignorance is pervasive, shit, there's still a majority of the people out there who don't know what Obama really did while he was a senator, much less as an Illinois legislator. Want to know why Washington doesn't care about Main Street, it's simple, Main Street doesn't care enough about what's going on in Washington, and empathy is a politicians best friend.

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SCREWED- Don't Bail, Jail!
Posted by: Purple Girl on Nov 13, 2008 7:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Paper and Promises
I like to think all we need to do is give people access to their annuity/Pension and other retirement funds and many of US could avoid bankruptcy and foreclosure.....except there is NOTHING in those accounts to give US.
At one time the Carpenters union would allow you to borrrow a certian percentage of your annuity- charge a adminstration fee, but all interest paid was back to your own account.
I theory many of US could pay off many of our debts and have some cas left over to dio alittle shopping. But reality there is no such funds available.
Anyone who thought they would EVER retire were kidding themselves, between the growing Demographics of elderly (Boomers) and the shrinking demographics of the 20ish generation, Those of US caught between have been screwed for quite some time. Job loss, Retirment fund loss, Increasing debt to income ratio- WE're fucked
Funny how they still cal the Big 3 the 'American Auto Co's'...Is that because they've left behind their HQ's? If these are americna Companies it is time they start acting like it....Not just for Gov't handouts, but by way of returning jobs to our Country first & foremost!
If Washingotn is going to kick down cash for the Auto industry... give it to those companies who have been investing (not divesting) in US. If you want a reality check on How little the Big 3 care anything about the US, Look at Michigan's economy for the last 3 decades. Look at our empty factories, our unemployment rate, Our foreclosure rate, our loss of Union influence in the labor market.
What has the big 3 Done for Michigan ..Left her like some Brutalized dead whore in a motel on Woodward & 8.
These Top brass are not just 'white collar Criminals', They ,like their masters the Oil Industry , our TRAITORS, War criminals and Accomplices in Crimes against Humanity.
3 decades ago we said to Get Out of the M.E., We screamed for more fuel efficient cars. I nconjunction with the Oil 'royals' the sludge dropped in price, thus allowing the Big 3 to continue keep US addicted by way of SUV's. We Never Asked for those, We were conned into it. Who needs subliminal messeges when Marketing is able to determine a persons worth by which car they drive.
Freeze & seize all assets of the Big 3 ,and their top brass' (past & present) personal assets and Offer sweet deals for takeovers to those Co's which have been innovating and Researching inspite of the Big 3's attempts to destroy them. The cure for this economic and environemmtal 'Cancer' has been around for decades, Infact some for a century (steam).
To end the reign of terror of the Oil 'Royals' all that is needed is to render their resource Useless, SLUDGE!

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» What about Fannie/Fred? Posted by: theVRWCwhodatesLiberals
Time To Try Something New
Posted by: popeurbanxxiii on Nov 13, 2008 7:23 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Throwing trillions of taxpayer dollars at the very perps who got us into this mess is only rewarding their malfeasance.

What this economy needs is not more, lower, and easier credit. What we need is the wherewithall to pay back our existing credit obligations. Bailing out the banks and arm-twisting them to make more loans available will not work.

The only reasonable solution -- short of debt forgiveness -- is putting more money into the family budget of the average American. If people could afford their mortgages, there would be no mortgage crisis. If there was less "month left at the end of the money", the economy would be humming again. It's not rocket science.

Globalism and Market Fundamentalism have gotten the American worker competing against third-world wages. There is always a lower wage economy to relocate jobs to -- much to the chagrin of India, Mexico, and China. Fair Trade, not Free Trade (a horribly ironic euphemism, if ever there was one...) is what we need to protect American workers. After all, our government should be protecting us from the venal predations of amoral corporations.

We tried "supply side" economics and look where it's gotten us to. Time to turn the tables. Let's try a little "demand side" economics for a change. Like Jim Hightower likes to say, "Everybody does better when everybody does better."

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bottoms up!!!
Posted by: ellie on Nov 13, 2008 7:49 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
personal solution to this economic mess...

1. create jobs with union protection across the board... union members can then collectively bargain with employers for health care, livable wages, pensions, job security, etc... with unions, safety IS in the numbers...

2. turn off the $$ spigot to wall street, crash and burn, so sorry for your loss... ordinary people get to cash out before crash... let the corps take it this time...

3. close for profit banks for credit unions...

4. credit without collateral, meaning real collateral not paper for loans like it used to be... return finance to something like the old gold standard...

5. no credit cards for anyone, anymore...

6. bankruptcy reform fast!!! allow cram downs and percentage of income (means testing) for all current debt to individuals not corps...

7. get out of the WTO etc and create jobs that can not be off-shored...

just for starters...

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Reagan as the solution?
Posted by: alturn on Nov 13, 2008 8:07 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In California today people are preparing for the next "big one" by doing earthquake drills.

The challenge is we never think of the financial 'big one' - the unique time where all the outworn ideas and institutions collapse under their own excesses and rot. So when it happens - as it is now - there is a rush to portray it as just another recession.

Money is the current medium of exchange. That was ok when we were learning to be individually responsible. Now the times ask us to learn interdependence. Interdependence works when we acknowledge there is a relationship between all things and that the health and security of other humans and the ecosystem is equally important to your own.

Interdependence works when sharing and freely giving is the governing principle. Where money gives way to quality and beauty as the measuring stick of a good life.

The changes needed are more radical than the difference between the old newspaper model and the emerging interactive online media. Old stimulus packages - particularly modeled after policies created by a president who started us on the path to this crisis - by themselves simply will not work. Holistic approaches that restore the American and global commons - and ensure food and dignity to every human - will.

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close the corporate tax loopholes
Posted by: l_double_e on Nov 13, 2008 8:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
it's time businesses pay their fair share. I am all for President Obama's tax credit for new job creation, but close all the ridiculous loopholes. Wal-mart is the worst at this, and some business actually pay no taxes and receive money back. The argument on the businesses using the tax loopholes is that the money saved goes toward job creation. Why then are jobs being cut, and all upper management in almost all fields of business are still receiving bonuses. oh yeah tax the bonuses as well. Retention of the best people is business as usual, sometimes you have to throw out the old and get some new blood in there. Think about it, if someone jumps ship, you can hire two fresh out of college people for the salary of the "best" person. Nowadays you need new ideas to keep the wheel going, not "we've always done it this way"

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Real and long lasting solution is easy.
Posted by: kiatoa on Nov 13, 2008 8:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Subsidies are a poor solution IMHO. Here is what I think would permanently remedy the situation...

Step 1:

Tax crude oil at $30-40 dollars/barrel. Apply the tax to both imported oil and domestic oil. Take the tax revenues (aprox $450 million per day) and pay a dividend to every US citizen adult over 18yrs old ($2-4 dollars per day). Apply the same idea to coal, hydro and uranium.

The effect? At the pump costs will be higher but the average Joe will have a few extra dollars in his/her pocket and net impact on cost of living will be zero. Subsidies (always a bad idea IMHO) on alternatives are not needed as the higher effective cost of conventional energy sources will naturally make the alternatives financially more attractive. Investment in alternatives will be lucrative and jobs will be created.

Step 2.

Apply the same idea as in step 1 to land. Tax land value (important: improvements such as buildings are **not** part of this value) and use the revenues to either offset taxes or pay a dividend to US citizens over 18.

The effect? Most land held speculatively will be end up on the market for sale, in many cases for very cheap. Mega corps that own large quantities of land and essentially tap the rents as profits will have to compete based on what value they add to the production equation as opposed to making money by virtue of controlling our most valuable natural resource. Similar forces will act on golf courses and other high volume consumers of land to bring proper accountability to land use.

Large quantities of poorly utilized land will become economically available at much lower cost for things such as small organic farms and new businesses. Net impact, business opportunities and jobs.

Of course I can't do a full analysis in a post but I think the principle is a sound one. Go to www.henrygeorge.org and read the abridged version of the book there "Progress and Poverty" or do the online course.

IMHO the primary root cause of our current economic woes is the taxing of income instead of taxing land and natural resources.

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Pink Elephants, Corporations, Coleslaw, Clothes Dryers, Coffee Makers and PERSONAL ACCOUNTABILITY
Posted by: stellabloo on Nov 13, 2008 8:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How to end the recession? How to end the recession? This is the equivalent of schoolkids tiptoeing out the door to avoid waking up Daddy, who is hungover again. This is the famous pink elephant in the living room that nobody really wants to talk about. You can blame it on immigration, you can blame it on overbreeding, you can blame it on pollution or you can blame it on the treehuggers, but the whole stinking system is inherently flawed.

OK I own a business, having given up a union job to work as an independant contractor - of course I want to make money. Baby needs shoes. But this whole notion of a publicly-corporation is intrinsically unsound. I make money on services rendered. How is it possible that I can publicly sell shares of my perceived worth (making money from an idea rather than a service or commodity) to stockholders who then expect a profit (again, out of nothing) based on my ability to make more and more money? Not just a profit, but an ever-increasing profit based on the underlying assumption that my business will just grow and grow until it fills the universe?

We hear that the days of the 3000 mile salad are ending - why is this a shock? Blame it on peak oil, blame it on Hurricane Katrina, which only proved to the oil companies just how much consumers willing to fork out at the pump for gas, but how in heaven's name did people in that much-lamented golden age of 50 years ago even survive the winter? The exciting possibility of solar or wind-powered hydroponic greenhouses aside, a mix of shredded cabbage, diced apple and raisins makes for a tasty and nutritious salad.

I had an interesting conversation about power conservation with an electrical engineer not long ago. Can you believe the hype about "vampire" appliances (cue theme from Psycho)? He was failing to see, really, what the point was. Do you actually think the world will be saved because you unplugged your toaster? He agreed that there were huge energy savings to be had just by buying a drying rack for your clothes and using it. Electric dryers use HUGE energy. Why don't those concerned powers-that-be suggest we can make a difference by maybe ELIMINATING the use of some appliances completely? Btw I am incredibly frustrated in my search for an old-fashioned wooden drying rack that is well-made and sturdy. Why are all the drying racks made in China? Why don't factories here make SENSIBLE products that sell? Like fuel-efficient cars, for example?

I cannot think of a more fitting symbol of our decaying, unsustainably culture than the automatic coffee-maker (unless it's the battery-powered pepper grinder). How many millions of these ubiquitous appliances have been conjured forth from metal and plastic, hawked for the $30 that would feed a child in the third world for a MONTH, and then consigned to oblivion in a landfill after a few short years (only to ultimately permeate the groundwater with the miasma of decaying plastic)? Not only are they COMPLETELY unnecessary (ever heard of a coffee press aka bodum?), but the heated brew forms carcinogens (!). Yet the importers of cheap automatic coffee makers from developing countries will cry wildly about their flat-lining or (persish forbid) slumping sales and the disgruntled shareholders will dump their stock and the market will take another hit and somebody will rush in with a plan to prop up the sagging bottom line (Christmas is coming, dontcha know?). Meanwhile the coffee-makers will continue to roll out of the factory and the older models will continue to scourge the earth.

Remember, in the utopian past of 50 years previous (surprising how the last two affluent generations pretty much raped the planet over in that short period of time), it was still OK to receive hand-knitted socks for Christmas.

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Don't worry about deficit spending.
Posted by: brankin on Nov 13, 2008 9:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Though times are different, keep in mind that Roosevelt deficit spent well in excess of 100% GDP going into WWII. Most economists feel that this, and this alone, finally got the US out of the Great Depression.

Whilst I agree that timidity has no place in Obama's administration, I feel much more than 7% deficit spending will be necessary to knock us out of the economic doldrums. I believe it needs to be closer to the 50% mark to be truly effective and it ought to specifically target the emerging green economy and broadband infrastructure. The latter because our broadband companies are not motivated to build next generation networks and are more interested in squeezing $$$ out of their current offering...to the extreme detriment of the (mostly ignorant) consumer, and our future economy. The former because it's the only option that has the possibility of creating both blue and white collar jobs, and has the added benefit of preparing us for the no (or low) oil consumption economy of the future.

Of course, this would not be popular with a large percentage of the population, but it's better than using funds to bail out companies that are unwilling to modernize...and have had ample opportunity to do so. At best, our current course of action is stupid. At worst, it's dangerous.

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Karl Denninger's proposals
Posted by: ozonehole on Nov 13, 2008 11:29 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For the past 1-1/2 years, I've been a reader of Karl Denninger's web site, market-ticker.org. He has been predicting this economic catastrophe with stunning accuracy. Today, he gave a good rundown of what he thinks President-elect Obama must do:

...here are the acts you must undertake as soon as you are sworn in, and you should announce them tomorrow so the market will stop tanking due to the lies of Mr. Paulson and Bernanke:

1. You will send up a bill that enacts a full repeal Gramm-Leach-Bliley. This was the law that repealed the Glass-Steagall act (the majority of it, anyway.)
2. You will send up a bill that reinstates the leverage limit of 12:1 that used to apply to investment banks (the dropping of which is the proximate cause of this mess, and which Henry Paulson was directly responsible for through his lobbying and requests) and apply it to all institutions doing business in The United States.
3. You will send up a bill that repeals the 2005 "Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention" act - an act you voted no on originally. This one should be a no-brainer, since you didn't support it originally.
4. You will send up a bill that repeals the TARP/EESA, and will vow to do everything in your power to stop the expenditure of any further funds under the existing law, and you will direct Treasury on January 20th to reverse the tax changes that granted $150 billion in "preferences" without a vote of Congress or even public notice.
5. You will send up a bill that requires the SEC, OTS, and OCC to compel all assets and liabilities to be consolidated upon a firm's balance sheet and directs that all marking methods, formulas and variables along with each asset held be disclosed accurately for every firm that operates in the United States.
6. You will direct The Federal Reserve by executive order to comply with the FOIA filed by Bloomberg and disclose, immediately and forever into the future, all loans issued, to whom, the specifics of the collateral pledged, and the discount or "haircut" applied. Such information will be published via The Web at the point of issuance of Fed Credit and all actions taken by The Federal Reserve or any of its district banks shall be undertaken in the full sunshine of the public view. If The Fed should refuse, you will pledge to send up to Congress a bill to repeal The Federal Reserve Act of 1913, and replace The Federal Reserve system entirely with an entity that will under penalty of federal law operate 100% "in the sunshine."

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How About RTZ (Reset To Zero)
Posted by: graycat3 on Nov 13, 2008 3:00 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How about we simply reset to zero- eliminate all consumer debt on real estate, credit card accounts, personal property property loans, margin accounts, one time. Its only paper. Put hard assets back into the hands of consumers.

Don't tell me about the poor shareholders! Their paper is going bad anyway. Ask your local millionaire if he/she would rather have their several houses, multiple SUV's, boats and personal property free and clear or keep their stock portfolio. I bet we could get a majority to vote for the RTZ Plan.

Yea, we would have to do something for businesses too. Relieve financial institutions of "mark to market" requirements, suspend certain performance ratios, maybe do something for debt on inventories for sale. No they would not need to fire employees.

Think about it. If you own stock in a REIT who owns regional malls that make money from rentals from retailers who make money from shoppers don't you want a population of relatively wealthy, debt free consumers with zero balances on their credit cards? Consumers with their full discretionary income intact and all that equity to borrow (prudently) against! All that product sitting on shelves, all those insurance policies to sell, all those unmargined accounts should invoke a controlled feeding frenzy. Business as usual in a short time?

What do you do when your computer locks up hard? When you see the Blue Screen of Death you reboot the system. You just waste your time and increase your frustration try to fix the glitch or work with an impaired machine. Our consumer is BSD. Reset to zero.

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WE NEED JOBS --NOT SPORATIC ECONOMIC STIMULUS CHRECKS!
Posted by: joeocho88 on Nov 13, 2008 3:14 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I found the concept of economic stimulus checks demeaning and insulting. It was like the elites in power were acting like we, the people who SUPPOSEDLY elect them to office to represent US, are tossing these checks at us like scraps to a dog under the table OR like a tip to a waiter, parking valet or other SERVER. Excuse me, THEY are SUPPOSED to be SERVING us!It was OUR money in the first place!

By making EMPLOYERS pay all sorts of taxes ABOVE and BEYOND the regular unemployment and social security taxes -- these stupid IDIOTS in the government have succeeded in shutting down a LOT of our industry or driving it overseas!

And this stupid GLOBAL WARMING fiction which is getting a lot of publicity and money for Al Gore is generating a lot of additional regulations that you can bet nobody but the USA will get stuck with enforcing. It also costs JOBS and PRODUCTIVITY when we need them both!

WE NEED JOBS THAT WILL PROVIDE FOR THE BASICS OF FOOD,CLOTHING,SHELTER!

NOTHING MORE AND NOTHING LESS.

If we don't get them, I think there will be an enormous outbreak of crime because that will be the only way people will be able to survive -- that is the MASS who is not in positions of power or other elite vantage points.

If the economy goes to hell like it did during the 1930s Great Depression,which nearly tore this country apart, then we are going to be in for some hazardous, dangerous and HORRIBLE times because I don't think people will stand for it now like they did then.

EVEN WORSE,WWIII will DESTROY THE PLANET so we con't even be able to have a war to get us out of it like with WWII.

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Simple, so simple
Posted by: Exile on Nov 13, 2008 3:42 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Offer a package to the automobile industry. Quite simply, Stop making cars, trucks and such. Offer them contracts for electric rail line components. That would keep people employed inside the united states. Begin promptly removing freeways, expressways and hiways, and replace them with interurban rail lines, and streetcar lines within urban areas. Link rural areas with inter-urban lines. Work with aircraft and specialty manufacturers to create a high speed elevated rail system, that rivals the efficiency of the airlines when it comes to moving people long distances.

This would first of all, create meaningful employment, on a national level, for local communities. Second of all, it would end our dependence on foreign oil in a few short years. Our addiction to foreign oil is a major issue with our trade deficit. It would be a much cleaner system, based on renewable energy, and since it's not battery powered, we won't have toxic batteries littering the landscape, like what would happen with electric cars.

I don't know why no one is talking about this, it makes perfect sense.

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Simple, Fast
Posted by: hilly7 on Nov 13, 2008 7:04 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fire Washingtom, Kick the Federal Reserve out.

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Abolish The Federal Reserve
Posted by: ron heringhauser on Nov 13, 2008 7:16 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Federal Reserve Not Federal and No Reserves is a criminal enterprise and must be abolished, if we are to have any hope of taking back our government. All of these bailouts are immoral and unjust for the hardworking taxpayers. Let these investment firms, banks, insurance companies file bankruptcy. They are like the gamblers who go to Vegas hoping to hit the jackpot and failed; they mismangaged their firms and deserve to go down...not proped up at taxpayer expense. By borrowing more money and increasing the deficeits, the government is just making matters worse. Let the recession run its course now and lets get it over with. It can't be stopped, only delayed and made much worse. The American Empire is done, bring the troops home and take care of all the critical problems we have here. Drastically cut government spending, starting with the militery-industrial complex, the Black Ops budget and the CIA for starters. Was anyone paying attention, when the only one in Washington who has the answers spoke (Ron Paul)? We'll be begging for him to run in 2012.

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Otto
Posted by: otto on Nov 14, 2008 8:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember Henry Ford's daring move to offer a "Five dollar Day", against what his advisors said. People can't buy cars if they don't have jobs or money. And FDR found lots of work to do in infrastructures.

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From the ground up stimulus (for a change)
Posted by: RickW on Nov 15, 2008 12:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Governments have used the oft tried and as often failed "trickle down" to stimulate the economy. So why not do the reverse and feed the money in at the "bottom"?

The $700 billion would give each American about $2300. Write each of them a cheque, and let the companies scramble to get some of that when it gets spent. After all, the American economy is 2/3 consumer spending. And trickle down doesn't work.

Just put a caveat that it must be spent on "Made in America" goods and services.......

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Don't take My Word For It
Posted by: joebhed on Nov 15, 2008 1:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Several cogent posts by people who do understand that the cause of the present financial collapse IS the debt-money system of the private bankers of the federal reserve banking cabal.
Let's take it from there.
We are choking on the TRILLIONS of new debt that we are creating on an as-needed basis.
This is unnecessary, as others have posted.
The United States government has the power to create its own money for the purpose of solving today's debacle.

We are dying of debt.
For good reason.

We cannot borrow ourselves into prosperity.
The prescription of the neoliberal business school economists is that we need to keep making new debt-money so that we can pay back the fees with interest of the old debt money.

But we never create the debt money with which to pay the interest.
There is not enough money available to pay off the debts that are created by ALL NEW MONEY.

Does anyone think that they will ever hear a banker say that the bank is lending into existence the money with which to pay the interest on the money that the bank has lent into existence, and which needs to be paid back with interest?

Cause, if not, then those learned of the FRS can please explain how this monetary system can ever function without bubbles and crashes in its present form.

Friedman was right about 100 percent reserve banking and a quantitative basis for money creation.
That is what the National Monetary Authority should be doing by next week.

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Mr. Lucien Beauly
Posted by: bfreewithrp on Nov 16, 2008 6:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We need a "Manhattan Project" to upscale our low "Renewable Energy" use into the forefront and abolish the use of "Oil", the polluter fossil energy source as our primary source of energy. Obama did mention a few words along this line during his campaign. We have a choice now.

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Taxpayers Credit Union
Posted by: hgovernick on Nov 16, 2008 11:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm just wondering why 700 billion dollars couldn't have been used to setup a source of funding for taxpayers, rather than handing it back to corporate squanderers?

Create a "Taxpayers Credit Union" from which taxpayers could borrow, transfer stressed mortgages, etc. It could be staffed by Government Service workers at currently established pay scales for GS workers.

At least with this approach, taxpayers would be "paying themselves back".

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